Mountains of Spirit
A detailed account of the rich history and resilience of the Bakwena ba Mogopa, one of the most important traditional communities in South Africa.
This seminal and lucid work depicts the scope of social, political and economic change of the community from its earliest beginnings as the Kwena tribe migrating from East Africa to southern Africa, the birth of the tribe as a distinct and independent lineage in the 1600s, the impact of land dispossession of the Boer settlers as they advanced from the Cape Colony to the interior, the impact of Christianity, the racist and oppressive attitudes and policies of colonial governments, through to the hardships endured under the Union government and apartheid.
A story spanning migrations, wars, land dispossession and restitution, intra-tribal rivalry, unrest, cultural disintegration, forced removals, pain and suffering and reintegration, Mountains of Spirit reclaims the history of a people and evinces the fighting spirit and resilience of a resourceful community against immense odds.
Freddy Khunou
Professor Freddy Khunou is a Professor at the School of Postgraduate Studies and Research, in the Law Faculty of the North West University, Mafikeng Campus, South Africa. He recently qualified as an Advocate of the High Court of South Africa and is a member of the Pretoria Society of Advocates.
- A modern, local history in a time of rediscovering indigenous African histories.
- Tells a sweeping tale of a people from the Iron Age to first part of the 21st Century in southern Africa..
- Filled with beautiful, unseen-before black & white and colour photographs of the Bakwena ba Mogopa people and the Rustenburg–Brits district of South Africa from the German Mission archives.